Abstract: | In many fish retinas, thin axons from the external horizontal cells extend through the inner nuclear layer and expand into large terminal processes that lie along the border of the inner nuclear and inner plexiform layers. Although the horizontal-cell axon terminals are structurally very prominent, their function is unknown. Here we report morphological and functional evidence that signals from catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) horizontal-cell axon terminals can be transmitted directly to amacrine cells. Current injected into horizontal-cell axon terminals produces responses from both transient and sustained amacrine cells very similar to those elicited by light stimuli. Electron microscope observations show chemical synapses from the axon terminals onto amacrine cell perikarya and processes. These data suggest that amacrine cells in the catfish retina receive two inputs, one from bipolar cells and the other from horizontal-cell axon terminals. |